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Stewart to retire - About time too.



CHAPPERS

DISCO SPENG
Jul 5, 2003
45,098
I must say i don't mind stewart as a wicketkeeper and recently his batting form has picked up but in the last few years the selectors have pissed the young keepers about and have finally realised that Read, if given a confidence boost (like more than 2 games in a row) will make a very good keeper. Hopefully his step up will lead the way for Prior and Ambrose to progress on to becoming back up keepers for England.

From Sky Sports...

England wicketkeeper-batsman Alec Stewart has announced he will retire from international cricket at the end of the summer.

The 40-year-old, who is preparing to make his 129th Test appearance in the first Test against South Africa at Edgbaston later this week, made the announcement at a press conference on Tuesday lunchtime.

The Surrey legend stands second only to Graham Gooch as England's leading Test run scorer and has also made more Test appearances than any other England player.

Among the highlights of Stewart's career were centuries in both innings against the West Indies in Barbados in 1994, and leading his country to a famous Test series victory over South Africa four years later.

"I have given it a lot of thought and I let Duncan (Fletcher) know this morning over breakfast and then informed David Graveney as well.

"It's not something I have taken lightly. I had 13 years as an international cricketer and it's not something you just give away.

"I could have left it until later on in the summer but I thought it was better to get it out in the open now so we can get on with the series."

England coach Fletcher said: "I was pretty surprised. I still believe that Alec is the best all round wicketkeeper we have got by some distance but there are some young keepers coming through.

"I think he has got better and better over the last couple of years and the thing that has impressed me most is his professionalism and the way he has been a role model for younger guys."

Stewart's father Mickey added: "Even today he'll be looking to the next game of cricket as if he was playing weekend club cricket or working in the City.

"We've had a few conversations over the last few months and I said: `You'd know (when to quit). It's your decision.'

"His young family has very much come into consideration. He's got a little boy and a little girl and to be away from home as much as he has has been difficult.

"It's a pity, as if he could have played on for another two or three years everyone would have benefited.

"This is all he wanted to do from a young lad. He's achieved his ambition playing for Surrey and England and he's enjoyed every minute of it."

Former England captain Mike Gatting backed Stewart's decision to retire from international cricket at the end of the summer.

Gatting told Sky Sports News: "I'm sure it is [the right decision]. He'll know himself if enough's enough. Any ex-player knows what it's like to retire. I think he's doing the right thing."

Gatting paid tribute to Stewart's contribution to the England side over the years, adding: "He's done everything that's been asked of him. When people have said he's down and out, he's proved them wrong, which is what great players do.

"He's been one of the players you put first or second on the team sheet after the captain."
 






Marc

New member
Jul 6, 2003
25,267
yeah Stewart has been a great England player over the years but like Seaman he should've stepped aside a while back, Read is a class young lad and I was watching the Kent v Lancs game last week and the commentator mentioned another bright young lad who "could challenge Read anyday" - forget the name but having 2 decent wicket keepers who can hold a bat is surely good news for the future.

Thanks Stewart anyway you were/still are great in my books :clap:
 


Trigger

Well-known member
Jul 4, 2003
40,457
Brighton
I was reading somewhere last week that Ambrose isn't actually a fully qualified English citizen yet and has to wait a while longer which is why he wasn't chosen for the winters academy...

Get Prior in anyway!
 


The Large One

Who's Next?
Jul 7, 2003
52,343
97.2FM
Trigger: Not true. Both Aldridge and Timmy are both qualified, both having at least one English parent. Hence the reason they do not count as overseas players. Both are also eligible for their home countries, South Africa and Australia respectively.

The same rule applies to Mark Davis as well.

Incidentally, Bastiaan Zuiderent does not count as an overseas player because Holland is not a fully-fledged test side.
 




CHAPPERS

DISCO SPENG
Jul 5, 2003
45,098
Who do we think is the better prospect, Prior or Ambrose?

Got to be Timmy really IMHO, he is the more consistent with the bat and doesn't seem to get bamboozled by Bowling Bowling Mushy and has even manged a few stumpimgs of his bowling.
 


Trigger

Well-known member
Jul 4, 2003
40,457
Brighton
The Large One... I've found the piece i was reading...

First published on Thursday 17 July 2003:

Cricket: Ambrose plays waiting game

by Bruce Talbot


Tim Ambrose will have to play the waiting game to realise his dream of performing on the international stage.

Sussex's Australian-born wicketkeeper-batsman thought he was already England qualified because his mother is English and he holds a British passport.

But when the county checked the regulations with Lord's last month they were told that Ambrose had to go through a four-year residency qualification which means he has to live here for 210 days a year.

"It looks like I've got to do my time first," Ambrose said with a smile this week.

"But I'm not that bothered. There is no better place to learn and I'm really enjoying my cricket at the moment."

Ambrose had his spirits raised when he chatted briefly to Academy director Rod Marsh at Arundel last week.

There's no doubt that the 21-year-old would have been in this winter's intake, along with Sussex team-mate Matt Prior, given the form he has displayed both with the bat and the gloves this summer.

The match-winning 93 not out he scored in the win over Essex at Arundel on Saturday came two days after he'd made 88 in the first innings.

That made it four scores over 75 this season and seven fifties, raising his Championship aggregate to 612 runs at 47.04. Only Tony Cottey, with whom he shared stands of 176 and 172, stands above him in the county's averages.

No wonder the Sussex members were almost falling over themselves to congratulate Ambrose when he made his way up the steps at Arundel on Saturday after guiding them to a third successive Championship win with an innings of wonderful maturity.

"We knew that if we batted the time we would win the game," he said. "And I just love batting with Cotts. The way he plays the spinners took all the pressure off me and I could just concentrate on staying in.

"I learned so much batting with him over those couple of days and he keeps me going.

"Between overs he just kept telling me jokes, most of them dirty ones to be honest!"

What's more, Ambrose seems to be revelling in the extra responsibility of keeping in four-day cricket as well. In the two games since replacing Prior for the Warwickshire game three weeks ago he has made three successive half-centuries.

"I was pleased with the way I kept in the one-dayers and the Twenty20 and I would have been disappointed had I not kept for the Warwickshire game," he added.

"Physically I feel fine. It's only been two games when I've kept and batted and in both of them I haven't spent that much time in the middle, but the body feels pretty good and I'm enjoying the extra role."

All Ambrose needs now, by his own admission, is to turn his batting form into a hundred or two.

He made two last season, including an unforgettable maiden 149 against Yorkshire on a Headingley pitch which tied down just about every other batsmen on both sides.

According to Cottey, it's only a matter of time but Ambrose admits he is getting impatient.

He said: "I desperately want to get a hundred, it's a milestone isn't it?

"Hopefully once I get the first one I will start turning more fifties into hundreds a bit like Cotts has done. It would really keep my season on a roll."

Chris Read's excellent form in the recent one-day series means England coach Duncan Fletcher is wearing a less furrowed brow these days as he ponders the long-term successor to Alec Stewart who seems certain to take his leave of the international stage at the end of the season.

Read is next in line but the likes of James Foster and Kent's Geriant Jones are also pressing. Now, if he maintains his current rate of progress, Ambrose will surely come under consideration when he qualifies in September, 2004, by which time he hopes to have put down roots in Sussex by buying his first home.

"I'm an Australian and I would find it hard not to play for Australia, but there aren't going to be any Aussie selectors knocking on my door," he said.

"I'm committed to playing English cricket for Sussex. I've learnt so much here in the past two years and I've got no right to turn my back on Sussex nor have I any will to. I feel settled here and I want to play for Sussex and hopefully England."
 


CHAPPERS

DISCO SPENG
Jul 5, 2003
45,098
Sounds very promising that Trigger. Gladly it seems that the guys in charge of the game are very aware of his capabilities na das for two of our players going to the Academy, well.....:clap:
 




SM BHAFC

New member
Jul 10, 2003
270
North Laine
Alec Stewart is going out at the right time, he has been a superb player for England over the last ten years. I bet he will still be one of the top run scorers this summer.

Top bloke and a great cricketer.
 


Trigger

Well-known member
Jul 4, 2003
40,457
Brighton
Chance to see Alec at Hove in a special cricket tournament at Hove... See thread titled 'More Cricket Anyone lol'
 


Highfields Seagull

Well-known member
Jul 7, 2003
1,448
Bullock Smithy
The Large One said:
Trigger: Not true. Both Aldridge and Timmy are both qualified, both having at least one English parent. Hence the reason they do not count as overseas players. Both are also eligible for their home countries, South Africa and Australia respectively.

The same rule applies to Mark Davis as well.

Incidentally, Bastiaan Zuiderent does not count as an overseas player because Holland is not a fully-fledged test side.

Being from Holland Bastiaan Zuiderent is also a member of the EU. Due to the free labour market restrictions cannot be placed on EU citizens working in Britain, so he also doesn't count as overseas because of this. Just the same in football.
 


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